Regional and
Telecommunications companies are doubly worried because hundreds of other municipalities provide broadband service over cable or telephone lines. The idea of cheap, municipally provided Internet as a social leveler is particularly appealing to big city politicians. «We looked at it as a way to be a city, literally, of the 21st century,» said Barbara Grant, a spokeswoman for Philadelphia Mayor John F. Street. «We wanted to bridge the digital divide for residents who wouldnt have access to the Internet, particularly schoolchildren.» Plus, the service could help make Philadelphia «hip» enough to stem the exodus of college graduates, she said. But the telecom industry calls such A chief complaint: a city can draw on taxpayer dollars, while a private company has to pay interest on borrowed capital. Consumer advocates say cheap «Theyre saying, You provide it to any place we cant or wont, but you cant charge a fee,» said Edward Schwartz, a member of Philadelphias wireless task force. «How does that work?» By Marc Levy
Associated Press